BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the invention
[0001] The invention generally relates to an improved method of drug delivery. More particularly,
the invention relates to an improved membrane penetration enhancer for use in the
transdermal delivery of systemically active drugs to humans and animals.
2. Background of the Prior Art
[0002] For some years, pharmaceutical researchers have sought an effective means of introducing
drugs into the bloodstream by applying them to unbroken skin. Among other advantages,
such administration can provide a comfortable, convenient, and safe way of giving
many drugs now taken orally or infused into veins or injected intramuscularly.
[0003] Using skin as the portal for drug entry offers unique potential, because transdermal
delivery permits close control over drug absorption. For example, it avoids factors
that can cause unpredictable absorption from the gastrointestinal tract, including:
changes in acidity, motility, and food content. It also avoids initial metabolism
of the drug by the liver. Thus, controlled drug entry through skin can achieve a high
degree of control over blood concentrations of drug.
[0004] Close control over drug concentrations in blood can translate readily into safer
and more comfortable treatment. When a drug's adverse effects occur at higher concentrations
than its beneficial ones, rate control can maintain the concentrations that evoke
only - or principally - the drug's desired actions. This ability to lessen undesired
drug actions can greatly reduce the toxicity hazards that now restrict or prevent
the use of many valuable agents.
[0005] Transdermal delivery particularly benefits patients with chronic disease. Many such
patients have difficulty following regimens requiring several doses daily of medications
that repeatedly cause unpleasant symptoms. They find the same drugs much more acceptable
when administered in transdermal systems that require application infrequently - in
some cases, only once or twice weekly - and that reduce adverse effects.
[0006] Transdermal delivery is feasible for drugs effective in amounts that can pass through
the skin area and that are substantially free of localized irritating or allergic
effects. While these limitations may exclude some agents, many others remain eligible
for transdermal delivery. Moreover, their numbers will expand as pharmaceutical agents
of greater potency are developed. Particularly suitable for transdermal delivery are
potent drugs with only a narrow spread between their toxic and safe blood concentrations,
those having gastrointestinal absorption problems, or those requiring frequent dosing
in oral or ir.jectable form.
[0007] Transdermal therapy permits much wider use of natural substances such as hormones.
Often the survival times of these substances in the body are so short that they would
have to be taken many times daily in ordinary dosage forms. Continuous transdermal
delivery provides a practical way of giving them, and one that can mimic the body's
own patterns of secretion.
[0008] At present, controlled transdermal therapy appears feasible for many drugs used for
a wide variety of ailments including, but not limited to, circulatory problems, hormone
deficiency, respiratory ailments, and pain relief. Percutaneous administration can
have the advantage of permitting continuous administration of drug to the circulation
over a prolonged period of time to obtain a uniform delivery rate and blood level
of drug. Commencement and termination of drug therapy are initiated by the application
and removal of the dosing devices from the skin. Uncertainties of administration through
the gastrointestinal tract and the inconvenience of administration by injection are
eliminated. Since a high concentration of drug never enters the body, problems of
pulse entry are overcome and metabolic half-life is not a factor of controlling importance.
[0009] My related U.S. Patent No. 3,989,816 generally describes a method for enhancing the
topical (as contrasted to the systemic) administration of physiologically active agents
by combining such an agent with an effective amount of a penetration enhancer of the
type disclosed herein and applying the combination topically to humans or animals,
in the form of creams, lotions, gels, etc.
[0010] Penetration enhancers for enhancing systemic administration of therapeutic agents
transdermally disclosed in the art include dodecyl pyrrolidone, dimethyl lauramide
and dimethyl sulfoxide. The prior art states that these agents may be used prior to
or concurrently with administration of the active agent, e.g. see U.S. Patent Nos.
4,031,894, 3,996,934 and 3,921,636.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0011] I have now discovered that the penetration enhancers previously disclosed in U.S.
Patent No. 3,989,816 to enhance topical delivery of physiologically active agents
also enhance the transdermal delivery of systemically active agents through the skin
or other body membranes of humans and animals directly into the bloodstream.
[0012] The invention therefore relates to an improved method for administering systemically
active agents through the skin or other body membranes of humans and animals, utilizing
a transdermal device or formulation, the improvement comprising the use therewith
of an effective amount of a membrane penetration enhancer having the structural formula

where R is H or a lower alkyl group having 1 - 4 carbon atoms, m is 5 - 7 and n is
O - 17.
[0013] The invention also relates to an improved method for administering systemically active
therapeutic agents topically through the skin of humans in a transdermal device or
formulation to obtain therapeutic blood levels of the therapeutic agents, the improvement
comprising the use therewith of an effective skin penetration enhancing amount of
1-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one.
[0014] In one preferred embodiment, R is H, m is 5 and n is O - 17. In another preferred
embodiment, R is H, m is 7 and n is O - 17. The preferred compound is 1-n-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0015] The described 1-substituted azacycloalkan-2-ones are made by methods disclosed in
U.S. Patent No. 4,316,893, the ap- plicably portions of which are hereby incorporated
by this reference.
[0016] Typical systemically active agents which may be delivered transdermally are therapeutic
agents which are sufficiently potent such that they can be delivered through the skin
or other membrane to the bloodstream in sufficient quantities to produce the desired
therapeutic effect. In general, this includes therapeutic agents in all of the major
therapeutic areas including, but not limited to, anti-infectives, such as antibiotics
and antiviral agents, analgesics, and analgesic combinations, anorexics, anthelmintics,
antiarthritics, antiasthma agents, anticonvulsants, antidepressants, antidiabetic
agents, antidiarrheals, antihistamines, anti-inflammatory agents, antimigraine preparations,
antimotion sickness, antinauseants, antineoplastics, antiparkinsonism drugs, antipruritics,
antipsychotics, antipyretics, antispasmodics, including gastrointestinal and urinary;
anticholinergics, sympathomimetics, xanthine derivatives, cardiovascular preparations
including calcium channel blockers, beta-blockers, antiarrhythmics, antihypertensives,
diuretics, vasodilators including general, coronary, peripheral and cerebral; central
nervous system stimulants, cough and cold preparations, decongestants, diagnostics,
hormones, hypnotics, immunosuppresives, muscle relaxants, parasympatho- lytics, parasympathomimetics,
psychostimulants, sedatives and tranquilizers.
[0017] Dosage forms for application to the skin or other membranes of humans and animals
include creams, lotions, gels, ointments, suppositories, sprays, aerosols, buccal
and sublingual tables and any one of a variety of transdermal devices for use-in the
continuous administration of systemically active drugs by absorption through the skin,
oral mucosa or other membranes, see, for example, one or more of U.S. Patents Nos.
3,598,122, 3,598,123,3,731,683, 3,742,951, 3,814,097, 3,921,636, 3,972,995, 3,993,072,
3,993,073, 3,996,934, 4,031,894, 4,060,084, 4,069,307, 4,201,211, 4,230,105, 4,292,299
and 4,292,303. U.S. Patent No. 4,077,407 and the foregoing patents also disclose a
variety of specific systemicallyactive agents which may also be useful in transdermal
delivery, which disclosures are hereby incorporated herein by this reference.
[0018] Typical inert carriers which may be included in the foregoing dosage forms include
conventional formulating materials, such as, for example, water, isopropyl alcohol,
freons, ethyl alcohol, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, propylene glycol, fragrances, gel-producing
materials such as "Carbo- pol", stearyl alcohol, stearic acid, spermaceti, sorbitan
monooleate, "Polysorbates", "Tweens", sorbital methylcellulose, etc.
[0019] Systemically active agents are used in amounts calculated to achieve and maintain
therapeutic blood levels in a human or animal over the period of time desired. These
amounts vary with the potency of each systemically active substance, the amount required
for the desired therapeutic or other effect, the rate of elimination or breakdown
of the substance by the body once it has entered the bloodstream and the amount of
penetration enhancer in the formulation. In
'- accordance with conventional prudent formulating practices, a dosage near the lower
end of the useful range of a particular agent is usually employed initially and the
dosage increased or decreased as indicated from the observed response, as in the routine
procedure of the physician.
[0020] The amount of penetration enhancer which may be used in the invention varies from
about 1 to 100 percent although adequate enhancement of penetration is generally found
to occur in the range of about 1 to about 10 percent by weight of the formulation
to be delivered. The penetration enhancer disclosed herein may be used in combination
with the active agent or may be used separately as a pre-treatment of the skin or
other body membrane through which the active agent is intended to be delivered.
[0021] This invention relates also to the use of an effective amount of a membrane penetration
enhancer having the structural formula

where R is H or a lower alkyl group having 1 - 4 carbon atoms, m is 5 - 7 and n is
0 - 17 in a composition for administering systemically active agents through the skin
or other body membranes of humans and animals.
[0022] In a preferred embodiment of the use m is 5 or 7 and/ or R is H.
[0023] The use of 1-dodecylazacycloheptan is preferred.
[0024] The invention related also to the use of an effective skin penetration enhancing
amount of 1-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one in a composition for administering systemically
active therapeutic agents topically through the skin of humans in a transdermal device
or formulation to obtain therapeutic blood levels of the therapeutic agent.
[0025] It is preferred that the use is concurrent.
1. Composition for administering systemically active agents through the skin or other
body membranes of humans and animals comprising an effective amount of a membrane
penetration enhancer having the structural formula

where R is H or a lower alkyl group having 1 - 4 carbon atoms, m is 5 - 7 and n is
O - 17, and a systemically active agent.
2. The composition of claim 1 wherein m is 5 or 7.
3. The composition of claim 1 or 2 wherein R is H.
4. The composition of claim 1 wherein the penetration enhancer is 1-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one.
5. Composition for administering systemically active therapeutic agents topically
through the skin of humans or animals to obtain therapeutic blood levels of the therapeutic
agent, an effective skin penetration enhancing amount of 1-dodecylazacyloheptan-2-one
and a systemically active agent.
6. The composition of claims 1 to 5 wherein the systemically active agent is a therapeutic
agent.
7. Use of an effective amount of a membrane penetration enhancer having tne structural
formula

where R is H or a lower alkyl group having 1 - 4 carbon atoms, m is 5 - 7 and n ist
O - 17, in a method for administering systemically active agents through the skin
or other body membranes of humans and animals in a transdermal device or formulation.
8. The use of claim 7 wherein m is 5 or 7.
9. The use of claim 7 or 8 wherein R is H.
10. The use of claim 7 wherein the penetration enhancer is 1-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one.
11. The use of an effective skin penetration enhancing amount of 1-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one
in a method for administering systemically active therapeutic agents topically through
the skin of humans in a transdermal device or formulation to obtain therapeutic blood
levels of the therapeutic agent.
12. The use of claims 7 - 11 wherein the systemically active agent is a therapeutic
agent.
13. The use of claim 11 wherein it is concurrent.
CLAIMS FOR AUSTRIA
1. A process for preparing a composition for administering systemically active agents
through the skin or other body membranes of humans and animals, comprising mixing
an effective amount of a membrane penetration enhancer having the structural formula

where R is H or a lower alkyl group having 1 - 4 carbon atoms, m is 5 - 7 and n is
O - 17 and a systemically active agent.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein m is 5 or 7.
3. The process of claim 1 or 2 wherein R is H.
4. The process of claim 1 wherein the penetration enhancer is 1-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one.
5. A process for preparing a composition for administering systemically active agents
topically through the skin of humans in a transdermal device or formulation to obtain
therapeutic blood levels of the therapeutic agent, comprising mixing an effective
skin penetration enhancing amount of 1-dodecylazacycloheptan-2-one and a systemically
active agent.